Reef corals spend all year pretending to be rocks, but for a few
special minutes each September, late at night, they explode into effervescent
life as they spawn and try to reproduce.
In the Cayman Islands divers and underwater photographers
are gearing up for a mysterious and elusive ocean event that happens once a
year when conditions are just right – coral spawning. During a limited
window of time, late at night in September each year, many of the corals in
Cayman’s reefs spawn simultaneously, releasing eggs and sperm together to
cross-fertilize and scatter in the current.
“One of the great lures of diving is that feeling of discovery - thrill
from seeing something that few others have,” says British marine biologist and
underwater photographer Alex Mustard, explaining the lure of the annual coral
spawning. “But as more and more people dive, rare treats are getting harder and
harder to find.”
“We think that it’s
tied to certain events or conditions, such as water temperature, the moon phase,
and the ocean currents,” says Dr. Ellen Prager well-respected marine scientist
and author. Dr. Prager, who was recently
staying at Sunset House doing research for an upcoming middle grade adventure
book, says the timing is critical because if the corals don’t release their
gametes at the same time they won’t have the chance to cross-fertilize.
“This is one of the most fascinating parts of the process because
for corals there is no enticing mating dance or courtship in advance of
spawning, and it’s not just one coral, it’s many and only once a year,” she
says. “It also takes a lot of energy
because they have to build up to it.”
The lure of the mysterious coral spawning is
irresistible for divers, both locals and visitors. Some will make late night
shore dives, with cameras in hand, from facilities such as Sunset House or
Divetech in search of the elusive event. Others with go out with Ocean
Frontiers at East End for late-night boat dives scheduled Sept 24, 25 & 26.
Working with Alex Mustard, Steve Broadbelt and his team believe that after 10 years, they
have worked out a formula that predicts the time the coral will spawn.
“We’ve got it down
to a 15-minute window, and last year it was 5 minutes out,” says Broadbelt. “One
of the first cues that the coral is going to spawn is the brittle stars − they
start to come out. If you don’t see brittle stars out, pack your bags and go
home.”
Copyright - Alex Mustard |
With some customers traveling
thousands of miles to witness the event, Broadbelt says there is pressure to
get the timing right for the “show”, and while they never guarantee that everyone
will witness the coral spawning, Ocean Frontiers has had good success. But it
is nerve-racking.
“So you get in, get comfortable, get camera
set up and then wait. And then 10 minutes of waiting seems like 10 hours,” he
says. “If you get in too early, your going to run out of air – if you get in
too late you are going to miss it and then you have to wait 365 days until it
happens again.”
Alex Mustard remembers the first night he dove
with Ocean Frontiers on the hunt for coral spawning.
“In the excitement of flying across an ocean
and heading out to the reef late at night, I had forgotten how much the odds
are stacked against us,” he recalls. “Maybe we were too late? Maybe the corals
had spawned earlier in the evening? Maybe they had spawned yesterday? Maybe
they had spawned a month earlier? Maybe they just don’t mass spawn in Cayman? I
look at my watch again.”
But within 20 minutes, and with a bang, the
main show starts - the ultimate
underwater fireworks display. The crowd
pleasers, according to both Alex Mustard and Steve Broadbelt, are the
mountainous star corals, true to their name, that release thousands of bundles
at once.
Copyright - Alex Mustard |
“The
intensity of spawning is such that the visibility has dropped from about 80
feet to about 20 feet in just a few minutes. It is like diving in a blizzard,
with the tiny fat-filled bundles drifting slowly to the surface like snowflakes
in reverse,” says Mustard.
Dr. Prager says when coral spawns it’s
like ringing the dinner bell for fish and other reef creatures. “It’s a feeding frenzy – eggs and sperm are like a buffet for
everything else on the reef. All of a
sudden lots of yummy treats are served, free-of-charge.”
The marine scientist says there is strategy involved in this
type of spawning described as “broadcasting”. Millions of eggs and sperm are
released because the corals are hedging their
bets that a few
eggs will survive long enough to become coral larvae and find just the right
spot to land and begin growing into coral. Survivors go where the wind, waves and currents take them.
This year people all over the world can
see the coral spawn in the Cayman Islands if they log on to a live underwater
webcam set up on a shallow coral head just off Ocean Frontiers’ dock. The
webcam is part of a reef monitoring system set up by Ocean Frontiers and Teens4Oceans a non-profit organization that encourages young people to
be ocean stewards. To view the webcam visit http://oceanfrontiers.com/webcam.html
Colorado teen Parker Lindsay, who logs
on to watch the live video stream several times a day, is excited about the
coral spawning. “Hopefully we can bring this amazing
event to the public!” he says.
Alex Mustard says although his original
calculations had held up so that Ocean Frontiers continues to successfully take
guests out to watch the spawn, its never a sure thing.
“This is nature and you can never be totally
certain, when chasing five minutes in a whole year. That, of course, is part of
the thrill,” he says. “As humans we are
too used to bending the natural world to our will, but to see coral spawning we
have to dive to natures rhythm.”
Corals spawn at the same time on all
three Cayman Islands. The different reefs of the world spawn at different times
of year and the mystery of exactly why remains and continues to fascinate.
Blog post courtesy of the Cayman Bottom Times Group.
The Cayman Bottom Times
is news collaboration by five leading dive operators to promote the superb
diving of the Cayman Islands, and keep the diving public informed of important
developments and events. Divetech, Ocean Frontiers, Red Sail Sports and Sunset
House in Grand Cayman, and the Southern Cross Club in Little Cayman, all
members of the Cayman Islands Tourism Association, represent more than 100
years of solid experience in a destination that is recognized as the birthplace
of recreational diving. With a unique combination of deep wall and shallow reef
diving, several wrecks, and world-famous Stingray City, the Cayman Islands has
cemented its place as the top diving destination in the Caribbean.
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